AGRICULTURAL AND Library SCIENCES LIBRARY School^ of A^ric ui h VOL. 12 NO. 32 “C’MON THERE Let these folks look -you oyer, ’ ’ say's livestock extension specisSjat Dwight' as.he par ades this aSiarket hog clfassliefore some 60 participating judges Saturday .at the Bollinger Wins Gilt At Lancaster County Swine Producers Field Day Eugene Bollinger, 16, proved again that he knows his pigs, Saturday when he out-pointed all competition in the youth di vision swine judging event at the Lancaster County Swine Producers Association Field Eugene Bollinger Farm Calendar July 10-8 pm, Lancaster Coun ty SWCD directors at Court house. July 11-9.30 am„ Lampeter- Strasburg 4-H Club at L-S High School. -10 a.m, Agronomy dealer meeting at Fleetwood Grange, Berks County. July 13-10 a.m., Pa. Pork Pro ducers Field Day at Penn State University. -7 p.m., 4-H County Queen Contest, at Long Park, Lan caster., Uancaster County Swine Producers As sociation Field Day. Assisting Younkin is Janies Horton, left center, who hosted the field day Masonic Homes Farm, -Elizabethtown. - Is. F. Photo Day. He was presented with a purebred Berkshire gilt as his award. Two years ago, at the County Conservation Field Day, he also won a gilt. But then his triumph came in the greased pig contest in which he out-figured that critter and had it hogtied in what may have been a record time of one and a half minutes. The son of Mr and Mrs Paul Bollinger of Denver R 2, Bol linger piled up 441 points of a (Continued on Page 8) Delaware Valley Milk Base Plan Recommended An amendment to the Dela- i ware Valley Milk Order was recommended this week bv the US. Department of Agriculture l As proposed, the older would be amended to include a base excess plan identical to that which was suggested by Inter- State Milk Produceis Coopera tive at the Philadelphia milk hearing session June 12-13. The amended order would al- ! so provide a reciprocal agree ment among orders 4, 16, and 3 ' to the effect that a dairyman ; could transfer from any one of these to another without being penalized. According to Inter-State director of public relations i Boyd Gartley, there will be no block voting in the refer- i endum to amend the present order; each dairyman’s vote will be tallied. Inter-State plans seven area meetings, Gartley noted, to explain the base-excess plan to dairymen, i The first of these was held i (Continued on Page 16) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 8,1967 Farm Price Levels Up Slightly For June Substantial increases in the prices received by farmers for vegetables, meat animals, and dairy products more than off set declines to push the June index of prices received up one point, according to the Pennsylvania Crop Reporting Service. Vegetables, meat ani mals, and dairy products all registered two percent increas es over the previous month. The increase in the meat ani mal price index was attributed to the increased prices receiv ed for steers and heifers and slaughter cows The price of steers and heifeis at $24 40 was 60 cents above last month, with the price of slaughter (Continued on Page 11) County Poultry Association To Host NEPPCO Tour Oct. 9 Directors of the Lancaster County Poultry Association voted unanimously Thursday night to host a tour October 9th in conjunction with the 1967 Northeastern Poultry Pro ducers Council (NEPPCO) Ex position. The proposal, made to the association by NEPPCO execu tive director Richard I. Am mon was enthusiastically en dorsed by the county board, meeting at the Lancaster Faim Credit Bldg. With poultry industry people fiom all over the northeastern U.S, and Canada, attending the annual NEPPCO Exposi tion October 10-12, Ammon not ed that a pre-exposition tour of ■ Lancaster County’s famed poultry industry and historical County Barley Quality Sags As Rains Hamper Harvest The old adage “make hay while the sun shines” also ap plies to harvesting small grains, but so far this month it has been difficult advice to follow for Lancaster County farmers. Usually by this time of the month the barley crop is finish ed up, and a good bit of wheat is moving into storage. Not this year. With combining beginning July 13, Field Day For State Pork Producers Pork producers from all over Pennsylvania will gather at Penn State University on Thurs day, July 13, for a field day, ac cording to extension livestock specialist Dwight E. Younkin. Meeting at the university’s swine center at 10 a.m., produc ers will hear Dr. Grant Sherritt discuss the colony houses and slatted porches, and will see the new "farrow-to-finish house.' A tour of the boar lots will follow. The rest of the morning will be spent touring and discussing the new meat evaluation center with the center’s manager Rob ert Kimble. Following lunch, producers will be given a demonstration of carcass measurements made on the evaluation center hogs by John Ziegler and James Wat kins Sherritt and Dr. J. L Gob ble will also report on some swine research now being con ducted. Eugene Wingert, St Thomas Rl, chairman of the newly formed Pennsylvania Pork Pro ducers Conncil, will describe the Council’s plans, activities, and programs NO QUEEN The selection of a Pennsyl vania Pork Queen for 1967, an (Continued on Paige 4) sights should attract consider able interest. TENTATIVE SCHEDULE Directors immediately rough ed out a tentative tour sched ule to he confirmed and pre sented in detailed form by the next board meeting August 3. 'Planned stops include mod ern laying hen and bioiler op erations, an egg piocessing plant, an historical exhibit, a barbecued chicken lunch, and a family-style Pennsylvania Dutch dinner served at one of Lancaster County's several res taurants noted for such fare. If time permits, diiectors sug gested the tourists might also enjoy seeing how tobacco is handled in sheds on Lancaster County farms. $2 Per Year the latter part of last week in the southern end, and some brought to dealers and elevators on the Fourth of July in all sec tions of the county, it is esti mated Thursday of this week that 90 percent of the barley crop is still in the field. QUALITY OFF Although some of the early barley harvested looked pretty good, the “quality is getting poorer all the time” as harvest continues, one elevator operator notes. Lodging has been quite wide spread in the county’s barley fields, and, although combines are able to get most of the downed grain, the continuing moisture on the lodged crop has taken it§ toll. Moisture tests, 12 to 13 percent before the re cent rains, are now running as high as 17 3 percent, according to reports. Test weights, as a result ef the shriveling kernels;*seem, to be averaging somewhere’ be tween 40 and 43 pounds per bushel, compared to some of the (Continued on Page 7) Selection Of 4-H County Queens Set For 13 th The annual contest for selec tion of junior and senior 4-H county queens will be held Thursday, July 13, at 7 pm., according to county home econ omist Dons W. Thomas The contestants will appear in street clothes at the Long Park amphitheater They are advised to arrive at the paik no later than 630 pm to re ceive final instructions, Mrs. Thomas noted Since early applications for the contest indicated a smaller (Continued cn Page 14) Advance legislation and publicity for the tour will be handled by NEPPCO, with bus es leaving Harrisburg at ap (Contanued on Page 7) Temperatures for the next five days are expected to av erage near the noimal mean temperature cf 76 degrees. With little day-to-day change expected, daytime highs and overnight low temperatures will range 87 to 65 degrees. Precipitation, perhaps total ing greater than %-iinch, is expected in the form of show ers Sunday and Monday.